General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsKGB on Trump in 1977: "The Perfect Target"

The perfect target: Russia cultivated Trump as asset for 40 years ex-KGB spy
The KGB played the game as if they were immensely impressed by his personality, Yuri Shvets, a key source for a new book, tells the Guardian
by David Smith
The Guardian, January 29, 2021
Excerpt
This is an example where people were recruited when they were just students and then they rose to important positions; something like that was happening with Trump, Shvets said by phone on Monday from his home in Virginia.
Shvets, a KGB major, had a cover job as a correspondent in Washington for the Russian news agency Tass during the 1980s. He moved to the US permanently in 1993 and gained American citizenship. He works as a corporate security investigator and was a partner of Alexander Litvinenko, who was assassinated in London in 2006.
Unger describes how Trump first appeared on the Russians radar in 1977 when he married his first wife, Ivana Zelnickova, a Czech model. Trump became the target of a spying operation overseen by Czechoslovakias intelligence service in cooperation with the KGB.
Three years later Trump opened his first big property development, the Grand Hyatt New York hotel near Grand Central station. Trump bought 200 television sets for the hotel from Semyon Kislin, a Soviet émigré who co-owned Joy-Lud electronics on Fifth Avenue.
According to Shvets, Joy-Lud was controlled by the KGB and Kislin worked as a so-called spotter agent who identified Trump, a young businessman on the rise, as a potential asset. Kislin denies that he had a relationship with the KGB.
Continues
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia-asset-claims-former-kgb-spy-new-book
Craig Unger courageously lifted up the lid...

Trumps Russian Laundromat
How to use Trump Tower and other luxury high-rises to clean dirty money, run an international crime syndicate, and propel a failed real estate developer into the White House.
By CRAIG UNGER
The New Republic, July , 2017
Excerpt...
Trump made his first trip to Russia in 1987, only a few years before the collapse of the Soviet Union. Invited by Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubinin, Trump was flown to Moscow and Leningradall expenses paidto talk business with high-ups in the Soviet command. In The Art of the Deal, Trump recounted the lunch meeting with Dubinin that led to the trip. One thing led to another, he wrote, and now Im talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet government.
Over the years, Trump and his sons would try and fail five times to build a new Trump Tower in Moscow. But for Trump, what mattered most were the lucrative connections he had begun to make with the Kremlinand with the wealthy Russians who would buy so many of his properties in the years to come. Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross section of a lot of our assets, Donald Trump Jr. boasted at a real estate conference in 2008. We see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.
The money, illicit and otherwise, began to rain in earnest after the Soviet Union fell in 1991. President Boris Yeltsins shift to a market economy was so abrupt that cash-rich gangsters and corrupt government officials were able to privatize and loot state-held assets in oil, coal, minerals, and banking. Yeltsin himself, in fact, would later describe Russia as the biggest mafia state in the world. After Vladimir Putin succeeded Yeltsin as president, Russian intelligence effectively joined forces with the countrys mobsters and oligarchs, allowing them to operate freely as long as they strengthen Putins power and serve his personal financial interests. According to James Henry, a former chief economist at McKinsey & Company who consulted on the Panama Papers, some $1.3 trillion in illicit capital has poured out of Russia since the 1990s.
At the top of the sprawling criminal enterprise was Semion Mogilevich. Beginning in the early 1980s, according to the FBI, the short, squat Ukrainian was the key money-laundering contact for the Solntsevskaya Bratva, or Brotherhood, one of the richest criminal syndicates in the world. Before long, he was running a multibillion-dollar worldwide racket of his own. Mogilevich wasnt feared because he was the most violent gangster, but because he was reputedly the smartest. The FBI has credited the brainy don, who holds a degree in economics from Lviv University, with a staggering range of crimes. He ran drug trafficking and prostitution rings on an international scale; in one characteristic deal, he bought a bankrupt airline to ship heroin from Southeast Asia into Europe. He used a jewelry business in Moscow and Budapest as a front for art that Russian gangsters stole from museums, churches, and synagogues all over Europe. He has also been accused of selling some $20 million in stolen weapons, including ground-to-air missiles and armored troop carriers, to Iran. He uses this wealth and power to not only further his criminal enterprises, the FBI says, but to influence governments and their economies.
In Russia, Mogilevichs influence reportedly reaches all the way to the top. In 2005, Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian intelligence agent who defected to London, recorded an interview with investigators detailing his inside knowledge of the Kremlins ties to organized crime. Mogilevich, he said in broken English, have good relationship with Putin since 1994 or 1993. A year later Litvinenko was dead, apparently poisoned by agents of the Kremlin.
Continues...
https://newrepublic.com/article/143586/trumps-russian-laundromat-trump-tower-luxury-high-rises-dirty-money-international-crime-syndicate
The stuff the deleted story needed to withstand the lawyers of MAGA
The Hidden History of Trump's First Trip to Moscow
In 1987, a young real estate developer traveled to the Soviet Union. The KGB almost certainly made the trip happen.
By LUKE HARDING
Politico, November 19, 2017
It was 1984 and General Vladimir Alexandrovich Kryuchkov had a problem. The general occupied one of the KGBs most exalted posts. He was head of the First Chief Directorate, the prestigious KGB arm responsible for gathering foreign intelligence.
Kryuchkov had begun his career with five years at the Soviet mission in Budapest under Ambassador Yuri Andropov. In 1967 Andropov became KGB chairman. Kryuchkov went to Moscow, took up a number of sensitive posts, and established a reputation as a devoted and hardworking officer. By 1984, Kryuchkovs directorate in Moscow was bigger than ever before12,000 officers, up from about 3,000 in the 1960s. His headquarters at Yasenevo, on the wooded southern outskirts of the city, was expanding: Workmen were busy constructing a 22-story annex and a new 11-story building.
In politics, change was in the air. Soon a new man would arrive in the Kremlin, Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachevs policy of detente with the Westa refreshing contrast to the global confrontation of previous general secretariesmeant the directorates work abroad was more important than ever.
Snipski...
The most revealing section concerned kompromat. The document asked for: Compromising information about subject, including illegal acts in financial and commercial affairs, intrigues, speculation, bribes, graft and exploitation of his position to enrich himself. Plus any other information that would compromise the subject before the countrys authorities and the general public. Naturally the KGB could exploit this by threatening disclosure.
Finally, his attitude towards women is also of interest. The document wanted to know: Is he in the habit of having affairs with women on the side?
When did the KGB open a file on Donald Trump? We dont know, but Eastern Bloc security service records suggest this may have been as early as 1977. That was the year when Trump married Ivana Zelnickova, a twenty-eight-year-old model from Czechoslovakia. Zelnickova was a citizen of a communist country. She was therefore of interest both to the Czech intelligence service, the StB, and to the FBI and CIA.
Continues...
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/11/19/trump-first-moscow-trip-215842/
It ticks me off to think we have a pee-resident beholden to our nation's chief adversary. That MAGA and the GOP dont mind make clear who the traitors are. Almost as bad are the US news media cowed into silence by fear of offending a tyrant.
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/who-is-alnur-mussayev-the-former-ussr-kgb-officer-at-the-center-of-explosive-donald-trump-russian-spy-allegations/articleshow/118489046.cms
Shoot, if people outside DU and Corporate McPravda knew my name is Stephen Sebastian Miller Gorka thered be real trouble. Bad trouble.
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)Hidden and in open sight.
BoRaGard
(7,591 posts)BoRaGard
(7,591 posts)Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)From WhoWhatWhy.org, a Deutsche primer:
Deutsche Bank: A Global Bank for Oligarchs American and Russian, Part 1 (1/08/2018)
International banking colossus Deutsche Bank has a track record of deploying illegal financial trading, money laundering, and shady offshore tax shelters in the service of the global elite. Should anyone be surprised that Deutsche is on Robert Muellers Trump-Russia investigation radar?
Deutsche Bank: A Global Bank for Oligarchs American and Russian, Part 2 (1/15/2018)
What do President Donald Trump and a number of Russian oligarchs have in common? Answer: Deutsche Bank. We pick up where we left off by examining how Trump first became involved with the international colossus a bank catering to clients who understood that sometimes the line between profit and illegality blurs.
Deutsche Bank: A Global Bank for Oligarchs American and Russian, Part 3 (2/01/2018)
Not only is President Donald Trump personally tied up with Deutsche Bank to the tune of $300 million, but his son-in-law Jared Kushner has his own history with the global banking giant. Part 3 looks closely at these relationships, and asks just how far President Trumps Justice Department will be willing to go in probing potential illegality on the part of Deutsche.
Deutsche Bank: Where the Dots of Russiagate Connect (1/24/2018)
Martin Sheil, a retired branch chief of the IRS Criminal Division, discusses his WhoWhatWhy series on Deutsche Bank and how nearly all the main figures involved in Russiagate also have ties to the financial institution.
House GOP Leads Russia Probe
Away From Deutsche Bank (2/27/2018)
House Republicans who are supposed to be investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election say there is no need to look at Deutsche Bank. Here is why they are wrong.
Source: https://whowhatwhy.org/2019/05/01/deutsche-bank-trump-russia-saudi-arabia-whats-the-connection/
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)Who are the other ones?
CrispyQ
(40,937 posts)And plenty of others who love money more than their country or don't want to be outed for their sexual fetishes.
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)And Putin loves crazy, outlandish buffoons as American leaders.
To embarrass the US.
We can easily identify those types in Congress.
Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)https://www.reuters.com/world/putin-hails-elon-musk-an-outstanding-person-businessman-2023-09-12/
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)yellow dahlia
(5,796 posts)somebody has something on L. Graham. He is scared of something.
Irish_Dem
(81,116 posts)He flips more than a fish out of water.
We know the what, we don't know the who.
Walleye
(44,695 posts)Because of course they had all the receipts. Snipski made me laugh. Thanks for maintaining a sense of humor in the midst of all this
Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2019/10/30/nunes-acolyte-misrepresented-himself-to-trump-as-ukraine-expert-061763

We the People, and Mott the Hoople, of course, are all what stand between king convict and tyranny.
Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)
Did the FBIs Charles McGonigal Help Throw the 2016 Election to Trump?
The shocking indictments against the former head of counterintelligence for the FBI in New York raise many dark questions.
By Craig Unger
The National Review, February 1, 2023
In the course of writing two books on Donald Trumps ties to Russia, the same question occurred to me again and again: How is it possible that I knew all sorts of stuff about Donald Trump, and the FBI didnt seem to have a clue? Or if they did, why werent they doing anything with it?
Specifically, I knew that:
* Starting in 1980, an alleged spotter agent for the KGB began cultivating Trump as a new asset for Soviet intelligence.
* The Russian mafia laundered millions of dollars through Donald Trumps real estate by purchasing condos in all-cash transactions through anonymous corporations that did not disclose real ownership.
* Trump Tower was a home away from home for Vyacheslav Ivankov, one of the most brutal leaders of the Russian mafia, and at least 13 people with known or alleged links to the mafia held the deeds to, lived in, or ran alleged criminal operations out of Trump Tower in New York or other Trump properties.
* Trump was some $4 billion in debt when the Russians came to bail him out via the Bayrock Group, a real estate firm that was largely staffed, owned, and financed by Soviet émigrés who had ties to Russian intelligence and/or organized crime.
Much of my material came from FBI documents. A lot came from open-source databases. It made no sense. There was an astounding amount of data on the public record. The FBI had launched enormous investigations of the Russian mafia in the 1980s. They had staked out a New York electronics store that was a haven for KGB officers. They knew thats where the Trump Organization bought hundreds of TV sets. They had their eyes on Ivankov and other Russian mobsters who were denizens of Trumps casinos and bought and sold his condos through shell companies. They had to know that Trump laundered money for and provided a base of operations for the Russian mafia, which was, after all, a de facto state actor tied to Russian intelligence. They had to know that the Russians repeatedly bailed Trump out when he was bankrupt. They had to know that Russia owned him.
Snip
As FBI director, Freeh had warned that Russian organized crime posed a grave threat to the United States that far transcended mere criminality. It is not clear how much he was paid by Prevezon after he switched sides, but Freeh later bought a $9.38 million mansion in Palm Beach, Florida, just a 10-minute drive from Trumps Mar-a-Lago.
Then there was the late James Kallstrom, who ran the FBIs New York office in the mid-90s and oversaw successful investigations into both the Italian Mafia and later the Russian mob. Kallstrom had developed close friendships with two key players in the Trump-Russia saga. He worked closely with thenU.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Rudy Giuliani in the investigation of the Cosa Nostra network that led to the famed Mafia Commission Trial of 19851986. Going even further back, Kallstrom had also been friends with Donald Trump since around 1973, when Kallstrom was putting together a Trump-funded parade in New York to honor Vietnam veterans.
Continues
https://newrepublic.com/article/170328/charles-mcgonigal-throw-2016-election
Unger has been on to the BFEE gangsters since they were in business with the bin Laden clan.
That Trump and his co-conspirators in treason are never held to account is an indictment of the US Supreme Court.
Meowmee
(9,212 posts)I may have linked it somewhere here a while back
Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)Trump has done all he can to distance himself from "The Russia, Russia, Russia Thing." It is imperative the American people learn the reality. Seeing how Corporate McPravda makes money by ignoring the damage the orange anus is doing on behalf of Russia and the Oligarchs, it's up to us. Here's something the journalist Greg Palast wants to remind us about:
How Billionaires Picked Putin as Russias Pinochet
From The Archives: The little-known story of Putins first election"
Greg Palast
Feb 23, 2025, first published by BuzzFlash | March 15, 2022
Excerpt...
Vladimir Putin did not arrive from outer space on an abalone shell.
Putin went from the virtually unknown Deputy Mayor of Saint Petersburg to Russias President and potentate by winning a weird competition organized by Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky who sought a Russian Pinochet to succeed Boris Yeltsin as President.
The competition, dubbed Operation Successor, went so far as to send Russias Larry King, Mikhail Leontyev, to interview General Pinochet for Russian TV while Pinochet was under indictment in Chile on murder charges. Russians were treated to the old dictators advice on choosing a leader who could imitate Pinochets strong hand, a police state, while promoting a hyper-capitalist economy.
And Putin fit the Pinochet profile.
To understand how Russia became, in effect, a military-corporate dictatorship, we have to go back to the 1990s when the former USSR, after the Wall fell, went along with the scheme known as shock therapy substantially crafted by the man who would become Clintons Treasury Secretary, Larry Summers. Yeltsins oligarchs grabbed 60% of Russias state assets for peanuts including the worlds largest producing oil fields.
The therapy was deadly. The US-designed smash-and-grab pushed 60% of Russians into poverty and half the population into starvation: calorie intake per person fell by almost half. Russian men, who had a longer life expectancy than Americans under the USSR, literally died by the millions their life expectancy dropped to 57 years.
The suffering and resulting Pinochet fever hit its apotheosis with Russias 1998 default on its debts. Ben Judah, author of the must-read Putin biography, Fragile Empire, explains the repercussions:
It was the moment when the elite got scared and moved over further toward authoritarianism. According to Grigory Satarov, Yeltsins former aide, it was then that [Yeltsin] ditched the idea of [reformer Boris]] Nemtsov as the successor and decided Russia needed a robust, military man. Intellectuals began to debate the need for a Russian Pinochet to defend the market.
The chance that Yeltsin, a notorious drunk, could get re-elected, was close to zero.
Source: https://gregpalastinvestigates.substack.com/p/how-billionaires-picked-putin-as
Today, of course, we see that they are doing the same via Trump. And thanks for absolutely nothing, Musk.
Meowmee
(9,212 posts)I will search online again too.
Here is one from the Guardian. It may have been similar to this one, I will keep searching.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia-asset-claims-former-kgb-spy-new-book
markie
(24,009 posts)Kid Berwyn
(24,288 posts)"Product Placement."

"Open your casebook in the morning and it was better than a John le Carré novel."
"The spy Smalinko was extracted because Donald Trump became president of the United States."
A Series of Unfortunate Events Is No Accident
https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=17092086